Change Slide Layout in PowerPoint
2013 for Windows

Learn how to change slide layouts in PowerPoint 2013.

Author:Geetesh Bajaj

Product/Version: Microsoft PowerPoint 2013OS: Windows 7 and 8

Date Created: May 3rd 2013Last Updated:
May 3rd 2013

Each PowerPoint presentation contains several slides which many users believe are akin to a blank canvas or an empty sheet of paper! You can thereafter add content to the slides in much the same
way as you use brushes to create strokes of paint to color a canvas. For example, do you want some text -- you add a text box. Want a picture -- just insert a picture and place it anywhere on your slide! Wait -- this is not really the way that you work with PowerPoint!

Unlike a new canvas or a blank sheet of paper,
PowerPoint does not like to provide you so much non-structured freedom -- and this can be good in many
ways. Primarily, PowerPoint structures each slide you create into one of its prescribed layouts -- examples
of such layouts include:

Title layout (comprising placeholders to add a Title and Subtitle for a slide),

Title and Content layout (comprising a slide title and a multi-purpose Content placeholder),

Title Only layout (comprising a slide Title placeholder with a blank area),

Blank layout (comprising no placeholders at all),

And several other layouts

In PowerPoint 2013 (as in PowerPoint 2010),
you can also create your own slide layouts. In this tutorial, you will learn how you can change the
layout of any selected slide from one to the other in PowerPoint 2013:

Launch PowerPoint and open any existing presentation, or just use the blank, new presentation which
is created as soon as you launch PowerPoint -- such a blank presentation already includes one slide,
as shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Blank presentation with one slide

Each slide within a presentation has a slide layout applied to it -- to ascertain which layout
your active slide uses, right-click the thumbnail representing it within the
Slides pane to bring up
a contextual menu as shown in Figure 2. Within this menu, choose the
Layout option -- this will bring up a sub-menu (refer to Figure 2
again) and as you can see the selected slide in this instance uses the Title Slide
layout because its thumbnail has a light pink halo (highlighted in red within Figure 2).

Figure 2: Ascertain the layout of your active slide

To change the layout of the active slide to another type, click on another thumbnail that
represents a different layout in the same sub-menu that is shown in Figure 2.

Alternatively, select the slide whose layout you want to change and access the Home
tab on the Ribbon. Click
the Layout button to bring up a Slide Layout drop-down gallery,
as shown in Figure 3 -- note that the Slide Layout drop-down
gallery provides the same options as shown in the sub-menu shown within Figure 2. Thereafter, click any of
the other slide layouts available. In Figure 3, you can see the new slide layout Blank being selected.

Figure 3: Slide Layout drop-down gallery

This will change the Layout of the selected slide. In Figure 4, you can see that the Title Slide layout has been changed to Blank

Have your ever used keyboard shortcuts and sequences in PowerPoint? Or are you a complete keyboard aficionado? Do you want to learn about some new shortcuts? Or do you want to know if your favorite keyboard shortcuts are documented?